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Engaging stakeholders
in climate adaptation:
why, when, who, how?
Why engage stakeholders?
• Climate adaptation is effectively about making changes to reduce the
negative impacts of climate change and harness any positive impacts
• It’s about:
– doing (good) things more
– doing things differently (better)
message
radio

– doing different (better) things
businesses that
distribute
work to
Vietnam)

e.g. dig more drainage canals
e.g. issue early warnings via text
to mobile phones as well as via
broadcast

e.g. establish fund to collect money from
benefit from healthy forests and
it to individual households that
maintain those forests (e.g.

• What is good / better needs to be judged with specific and explicit
reference to changes in the climate, but also alongside other key
considerations, which may or may not be directly impacted by or impact
on the climate (e.g. economic market demands, government policies, etc.)
Why engage stakeholders?
• Making such judgements usually require some scientific
information but are also based on values (i.e. choices often cannot
be made on a purely technical basis but also require political
negotiation to be accepted)
• Implementing chosen changes often requires a range of mandates,
resources and expertise, seldom found in a single individual or
organization
• The process of adaptation therefore often requires collaboration
between a variety of stakeholders
• In addition, change is not well accepted and undertaken when
people don’t feel like they are part of the process of deciding on it,
therefore excluding stakeholders can potentially undermine the
adaptation process
When might stakeholder engagement
be necessary or beneficial?
• There are various stages in the adaptation process that might require
engaging with a variety of different stakeholders:
– Problem definition and analysis (i.e. climate impacts and sources of
vulnerability) – explored in exercise 1
– Raising awareness amongst other influential stakeholders who might not be
seeing the problem at all / or in the same way
– Planning an intervention to reduce climate impacts or harness new
opportunities (in terms of goal, objectives, strategies, actions, resources
required, means of measuring progress & impact)
– Doing the selected actions
– Reviewing and evaluating progress and outcomes (i.e. what is working, what is
not, who is benefitting, who is losing out / paying a price)
– Redesigning the next phase based on evidence gathered, lessons learned and
newly emerging needs and preferences

• Each stage might require a different level or depth of participation
• These stages are not often discrete and sequential but rather overlapping
and iterative
Exercise 1: combining perspectives
through group mapping
• Purpose: identify and work through differences in
perception about what the various causes of a problem are
that in turn can be used to identify suitable interventions to
deal with the root causes and not simply the symptoms
Instructions:
1.
2.

Get into groups of 4-5
On a sheet of flip
chart draw a large
fishbone
Exercise 1: combining perspectives
through group mapping
• Instructions continued:
3.
4.

5.

Label the head of the fish with the problem to be analyzed
e.g. increases in crop failure
Identify factors that may cause this problem, prompted by
asking “why”. Group members add their suggestions to the
lateral bones of the fish (use post-it notes so they can be
moved around if necessary)
Explore the root causes of each suggested factor in turn

Problem
Proximate causes
Root causes
Exercise 1: combining perspectives
through group mapping
•

•

•
•

Discuss plenary: the potential strengths and weaknesses of using
this kind of exercises with different stakeholder groups (e.g.
groups of fishermen, local government officials, national policymakers, etc.)
Alternative version of the exercise: First individuals create their
own graphic before combining them into a group picture (useful
when topic is new and unfamiliar or very contentious, enables
participants to take time gathering their own thoughts before
engaging with others to reach a consensus version)
One limitation of this exercise is that it doesn’t explore the
feedbacks between causes
A more advance version of this exercise is to develop a systems
model that captures these feedbacks (both positive and negative)
to capture more complex system dynamics and the possible
knock on effects of a particular intervention
Who are the stakeholders to engage?
• Depends on aim of the engagement (i.e. list in slide on when to
engage), the resources available (often one has to be selective
for practical purposes), and the willingness of individuals and
organizations to be engaged
• Types of stakeholders:
– Social or economic / livelihood groups (e.g. mothers, rice farmers, tourist
guides, dive instructors, etc.)
– Civic networks / non-governmental organizations (e.g. trade unions,
religious leaders, etc.)
– Professional groups (e.g. spatial planners, veterinarians, educators, etc.)
– Government officials and policy-makers (e.g. provincial politicians, local
administrative officials, etc.)
– Businesses (e.g. ferry company, fishing charters, hotel chains, bottled
water company, rice processors, etc.)
Who are the stakeholders to engage?
• Prioritize those with
importance to and
influence over the
problem being
addressed, but being
careful not to perpetuate
or further entrench
existing inequalities by
excluding those with
minimal power, influence
and resources
Source: VSO Participatory Approaches: A facilitator’s guide
Note: PA = participatory approaches
Who are the stakeholders to engage?
• There is often value in linking across scales / governance
levels (community-based, local, provincial, national,
regional, international stakeholders as relevant) and
between sectors to draw in different knowledge, resources,
areas of influence and responsibilities
• The next exercise is one example of how to identify who
the critical stakeholders are in relation to the climate
change-related issue you are targeting
Exercise 2: exploring influence and
importance of different stakeholders
•

Purpose: Stakeholder Mapping shows the key institutions and individuals linked to
an issue or intended outcome, together with their relationships and their
importance in decision-making

Instructions:
1.

In your group decide on the adaptation issue / outcome to be focused on –
write in centre of flip chart sheet

2.

List the stakeholders that affect and are affected by that issue

3.

Cut out different size circles to represent each institution or individual, the
bigger circle indicates more important stakeholders, label each circle with the
name of the institution or individual

4.

Lay out the circles relative to each other according to the degree of contact and
overlap between each circle in terms of decision-making:
separate circles = no contact
touching circles = information passes between institutions

More important

small overlap = some cooperation in decision-making
large overlap = considerable cooperation in decision-making

Less important
Exercise 2: exploring influence and
importance of different stakeholders
• Discuss in plenary: does this exercise help reveal which
stakeholders to target in various ways; can you begin to
identify where potential conflicts might arise between interest
groups
• Beware that the alliances of group participants may influence
consensus over who is ‘important’, which may result in a
skewed picture if there is not diverse representation
• This exercise can lead to more advanced techniques such as
formal Social Network Analysis (where more rigorous and
detailed information adds value and resources exist to
implement the method)
How to engage different types of
stakeholders
• Key principles of effective engagement (adapted from
Gardner et al, 2009):
– Learn about other current or prior engagements: important because
prior positive experiences can help promote engagement, prior
negative experiences can retard engagement; current activities of
other groups can potentially confuse participants or cause mutual
interference, but also present opportunities to use existing forums.
– Set goals and plan: spend time clarifying what you want to achieve
from the engagement process; be strategic about where/with whom
engagement is pursued; adding a discussion of climate adaptation into
existing engagement groups may be an efficient approach.
– Manage expectations: establish up-front where there is potential for
participants to influence outcomes and where there is not.
How to engage different types of
stakeholders
• Key principles of effective engagement (adapted from
Gardner et al, 2009)… continued:
– Use group discussion: it is important to use a range of engagement
forums, but group discussion is particularly important to enable the
“high quality conversations” which allow people to develop a more
complex understanding of the issue at hand.
– Use varied presentation formats: information should be presented in a
range of different ways to accommodate the range of learning styles
and needs in the community.
– Allow for mutual influence: participants should have the opportunity
to have input into decisions (as opposed to just being told what to do
or just being asked to identify issues).
How to engage different types of
stakeholders
• Key principles of effective engagement (adapted from
Gardner et al, 2009) … continued:
– Foster trust, respect and ownership: Ideally, all parties to the
engagement process should trust each other, respect one another’s
viewpoint and inputs, and should gain a sense of personal
responsibility towards the issue.
– Maintain contact and feedback: people become cynical about
engagement if conveners do not communicate how participants’ input
and suggestions were taken into account.
– Engagement should be systematically evaluated, to draw lessons for
the next time.
How to engage different types of
stakeholders
• There are various types of engagement for which some modes of
engagement are more effective than others:
–
–
–
–
–
–

Informing
Lobbying
Consulting
Shared decision-making
Acting together (joint implementation)
Knowledge co-production and learning

• There are a range of participatory tools & methods, some of which
are better suited to certain stakeholder groups than others (e.g.
community members versus national policy-makers versus
commercial business managers)
• More of these can be included in further modules if considered
needed and thereby a learning priority
Recommended resources
• weADAPT
– Risk communications
– Stakeholder analysis and engagement
– Social learning

• Gardner, J, Dowd, A-M., Mason, C. and Ashworth, P. (2009).
A framework for stakeholder engagement on climate
adaptation. CSIRO Climate Adaptation Flagship Working
paper No.3, URL: http://www.csiro.au/files/files/pph1.pdf
• VSO Participatory Approaches: A facilitator’s guide, URL:
http://community.eldis.org/.59c6ec19/

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Training module on stakeholder engagement

  • 1. Engaging stakeholders in climate adaptation: why, when, who, how?
  • 2. Why engage stakeholders? • Climate adaptation is effectively about making changes to reduce the negative impacts of climate change and harness any positive impacts • It’s about: – doing (good) things more – doing things differently (better) message radio – doing different (better) things businesses that distribute work to Vietnam) e.g. dig more drainage canals e.g. issue early warnings via text to mobile phones as well as via broadcast e.g. establish fund to collect money from benefit from healthy forests and it to individual households that maintain those forests (e.g. • What is good / better needs to be judged with specific and explicit reference to changes in the climate, but also alongside other key considerations, which may or may not be directly impacted by or impact on the climate (e.g. economic market demands, government policies, etc.)
  • 3. Why engage stakeholders? • Making such judgements usually require some scientific information but are also based on values (i.e. choices often cannot be made on a purely technical basis but also require political negotiation to be accepted) • Implementing chosen changes often requires a range of mandates, resources and expertise, seldom found in a single individual or organization • The process of adaptation therefore often requires collaboration between a variety of stakeholders • In addition, change is not well accepted and undertaken when people don’t feel like they are part of the process of deciding on it, therefore excluding stakeholders can potentially undermine the adaptation process
  • 4. When might stakeholder engagement be necessary or beneficial? • There are various stages in the adaptation process that might require engaging with a variety of different stakeholders: – Problem definition and analysis (i.e. climate impacts and sources of vulnerability) – explored in exercise 1 – Raising awareness amongst other influential stakeholders who might not be seeing the problem at all / or in the same way – Planning an intervention to reduce climate impacts or harness new opportunities (in terms of goal, objectives, strategies, actions, resources required, means of measuring progress & impact) – Doing the selected actions – Reviewing and evaluating progress and outcomes (i.e. what is working, what is not, who is benefitting, who is losing out / paying a price) – Redesigning the next phase based on evidence gathered, lessons learned and newly emerging needs and preferences • Each stage might require a different level or depth of participation • These stages are not often discrete and sequential but rather overlapping and iterative
  • 5. Exercise 1: combining perspectives through group mapping • Purpose: identify and work through differences in perception about what the various causes of a problem are that in turn can be used to identify suitable interventions to deal with the root causes and not simply the symptoms Instructions: 1. 2. Get into groups of 4-5 On a sheet of flip chart draw a large fishbone
  • 6. Exercise 1: combining perspectives through group mapping • Instructions continued: 3. 4. 5. Label the head of the fish with the problem to be analyzed e.g. increases in crop failure Identify factors that may cause this problem, prompted by asking “why”. Group members add their suggestions to the lateral bones of the fish (use post-it notes so they can be moved around if necessary) Explore the root causes of each suggested factor in turn Problem Proximate causes Root causes
  • 7. Exercise 1: combining perspectives through group mapping • • • • Discuss plenary: the potential strengths and weaknesses of using this kind of exercises with different stakeholder groups (e.g. groups of fishermen, local government officials, national policymakers, etc.) Alternative version of the exercise: First individuals create their own graphic before combining them into a group picture (useful when topic is new and unfamiliar or very contentious, enables participants to take time gathering their own thoughts before engaging with others to reach a consensus version) One limitation of this exercise is that it doesn’t explore the feedbacks between causes A more advance version of this exercise is to develop a systems model that captures these feedbacks (both positive and negative) to capture more complex system dynamics and the possible knock on effects of a particular intervention
  • 8. Who are the stakeholders to engage? • Depends on aim of the engagement (i.e. list in slide on when to engage), the resources available (often one has to be selective for practical purposes), and the willingness of individuals and organizations to be engaged • Types of stakeholders: – Social or economic / livelihood groups (e.g. mothers, rice farmers, tourist guides, dive instructors, etc.) – Civic networks / non-governmental organizations (e.g. trade unions, religious leaders, etc.) – Professional groups (e.g. spatial planners, veterinarians, educators, etc.) – Government officials and policy-makers (e.g. provincial politicians, local administrative officials, etc.) – Businesses (e.g. ferry company, fishing charters, hotel chains, bottled water company, rice processors, etc.)
  • 9. Who are the stakeholders to engage? • Prioritize those with importance to and influence over the problem being addressed, but being careful not to perpetuate or further entrench existing inequalities by excluding those with minimal power, influence and resources Source: VSO Participatory Approaches: A facilitator’s guide Note: PA = participatory approaches
  • 10. Who are the stakeholders to engage? • There is often value in linking across scales / governance levels (community-based, local, provincial, national, regional, international stakeholders as relevant) and between sectors to draw in different knowledge, resources, areas of influence and responsibilities • The next exercise is one example of how to identify who the critical stakeholders are in relation to the climate change-related issue you are targeting
  • 11. Exercise 2: exploring influence and importance of different stakeholders • Purpose: Stakeholder Mapping shows the key institutions and individuals linked to an issue or intended outcome, together with their relationships and their importance in decision-making Instructions: 1. In your group decide on the adaptation issue / outcome to be focused on – write in centre of flip chart sheet 2. List the stakeholders that affect and are affected by that issue 3. Cut out different size circles to represent each institution or individual, the bigger circle indicates more important stakeholders, label each circle with the name of the institution or individual 4. Lay out the circles relative to each other according to the degree of contact and overlap between each circle in terms of decision-making: separate circles = no contact touching circles = information passes between institutions More important small overlap = some cooperation in decision-making large overlap = considerable cooperation in decision-making Less important
  • 12. Exercise 2: exploring influence and importance of different stakeholders • Discuss in plenary: does this exercise help reveal which stakeholders to target in various ways; can you begin to identify where potential conflicts might arise between interest groups • Beware that the alliances of group participants may influence consensus over who is ‘important’, which may result in a skewed picture if there is not diverse representation • This exercise can lead to more advanced techniques such as formal Social Network Analysis (where more rigorous and detailed information adds value and resources exist to implement the method)
  • 13. How to engage different types of stakeholders • Key principles of effective engagement (adapted from Gardner et al, 2009): – Learn about other current or prior engagements: important because prior positive experiences can help promote engagement, prior negative experiences can retard engagement; current activities of other groups can potentially confuse participants or cause mutual interference, but also present opportunities to use existing forums. – Set goals and plan: spend time clarifying what you want to achieve from the engagement process; be strategic about where/with whom engagement is pursued; adding a discussion of climate adaptation into existing engagement groups may be an efficient approach. – Manage expectations: establish up-front where there is potential for participants to influence outcomes and where there is not.
  • 14. How to engage different types of stakeholders • Key principles of effective engagement (adapted from Gardner et al, 2009)… continued: – Use group discussion: it is important to use a range of engagement forums, but group discussion is particularly important to enable the “high quality conversations” which allow people to develop a more complex understanding of the issue at hand. – Use varied presentation formats: information should be presented in a range of different ways to accommodate the range of learning styles and needs in the community. – Allow for mutual influence: participants should have the opportunity to have input into decisions (as opposed to just being told what to do or just being asked to identify issues).
  • 15. How to engage different types of stakeholders • Key principles of effective engagement (adapted from Gardner et al, 2009) … continued: – Foster trust, respect and ownership: Ideally, all parties to the engagement process should trust each other, respect one another’s viewpoint and inputs, and should gain a sense of personal responsibility towards the issue. – Maintain contact and feedback: people become cynical about engagement if conveners do not communicate how participants’ input and suggestions were taken into account. – Engagement should be systematically evaluated, to draw lessons for the next time.
  • 16. How to engage different types of stakeholders • There are various types of engagement for which some modes of engagement are more effective than others: – – – – – – Informing Lobbying Consulting Shared decision-making Acting together (joint implementation) Knowledge co-production and learning • There are a range of participatory tools & methods, some of which are better suited to certain stakeholder groups than others (e.g. community members versus national policy-makers versus commercial business managers) • More of these can be included in further modules if considered needed and thereby a learning priority
  • 17. Recommended resources • weADAPT – Risk communications – Stakeholder analysis and engagement – Social learning • Gardner, J, Dowd, A-M., Mason, C. and Ashworth, P. (2009). A framework for stakeholder engagement on climate adaptation. CSIRO Climate Adaptation Flagship Working paper No.3, URL: http://www.csiro.au/files/files/pph1.pdf • VSO Participatory Approaches: A facilitator’s guide, URL: http://community.eldis.org/.59c6ec19/

Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. Time requires: 45min to an hourExplanation of exercise process: Agree on goal as a group, write in center of flip chart sheet; individually think of primary causes and write one per post-it; take turns sharing 1 cause and placing it on the flip chart (start with one you think is most important, once everyone has shared their most important then start with 2nd most important, keep going in rounds until everyone has shared all they have, throwing out any duplicates); after each persons turn others can comment on choice and agree or suggest modification; add arrow to goal marked with + or – indicating positive or negative influence (i.e. driver or barrier); repeat same process for second order causes and + or – influence each has on the primary causes; finally add feedback loops from goal to causes and from primary to secondary causes as relevant.Resource required: post-it notes; flip chart; pens
  2. Time requires: 45min to an hourExplanation of exercise process: Agree on goal as a group, write in center of flip chart sheet; individually think of primary causes and write one per post-it; take turns sharing 1 cause and placing it on the flip chart (start with one you think is most important, once everyone has shared their most important then start with 2nd most important, keep going in rounds until everyone has shared all they have, throwing out any duplicates); after each persons turn others can comment on choice and agree or suggest modification; add arrow to goal marked with + or – indicating positive or negative influence (i.e. driver or barrier); repeat same process for second order causes and + or – influence each has on the primary causes; finally add feedback loops from goal to causes and from primary to secondary causes as relevant.Resource required: post-it notes; flip chart; pens
  3. Time requires: 45min to an hourExplanation of exercise process: Agree on goal as a group, write in center of flip chart sheet; individually think of primary causes and write one per post-it; take turns sharing 1 cause and placing it on the flip chart (start with one you think is most important, once everyone has shared their most important then start with 2nd most important, keep going in rounds until everyone has shared all they have, throwing out any duplicates); after each persons turn others can comment on choice and agree or suggest modification; add arrow to goal marked with + or – indicating positive or negative influence (i.e. driver or barrier); repeat same process for second order causes and + or – influence each has on the primary causes; finally add feedback loops from goal to causes and from primary to secondary causes as relevant.Resource required: post-it notes; flip chart; pens
  4. Time required: 45minResources required:Sheets of card to cut out the circles (or a balls of string / wool as an alternative)Flip chart paperPensScissors